Frenchmen Claim Cure for WannaCry-Infected Computers

Researchers worked separately to find ways to decrypt files scrambled and held hostage by WannaCry

This image provided by the Twitter page of @fendifille shows a computer at Greater Preston CCG as Britain's National Health Service is investigating "an issue with IT" Friday May 12, 2017. Several British hospitals say they are having major computer problems Hospitals in London, northwest England and other parts of the country are reporting problems with their computer systems as the result of an apparent cyberattack. (@fendifille via AP), photo: @fendifille, via AP

PARIS – French researchers have released software tools that they claim can restore some of the computers locked up by a global cyberattack that held users' files for ransom.The researchers said, however, that the tools are not perfect and work only if the computers infected with the WannaCry ransomware have not been rebooted after being hit. For that reason, the technique isn't likely to help many people. In addition, companies needing to restore their operations right away likely would have turned to backups, if available, by now.The developments came Friday, the apparent deadline for owners of some infected machines to pay a ransom of up to $600 or lose their files forever. As of Friday, the three accounts known to collect ransom payments had received less than $100,000 worth of the cybercurrency bitcoin, an amount that security researchers say is small compared with how widely WannaCry spread.The researchers — Adrien Guinet, Matthieu Suiche and Benjamin Delpy — worked separately to find ways to decrypt files scrambled and held hostage by WannaCry.In his research summary, Guinet — who works for the Paris-based firm Quarkslab — said his software had only been tested to work under Windows XP. He added the software helps recover the prime numbers of the RSA private key that are used by WannaCry.After Guinet's fix came out, others looked for ways to extend that to other operating systems and have succeeded in applying the technique to the newer Windows 7 system as well.Chris Wysopal, chief technology officer with the software security company Veracode, said that after ransomware attacks, researchers will often infect one of their own machines on purpose to see if the key is somehow left in the memory. That happened here with some systems of Windows.